An urban farm in North Carolina is celebrating Black History Month this weekend with a farmers market and historic group hike.
Urban Community AgriNomics in Durham is holding its farmers market at Catawba Trail Farm and is inviting people on a hike through an old plantation where the organization has reclaimed an old farmstead.
Delphine Sellars, executive director of the nonprofit, said the legacy of agriculture is important for people of color.
"We as the descendants are now farming and dealing with agriculture not because we have to but because we want to and we realize the benefits of it," Sellars explained.
The plantation where the group is reclaiming farming was one of the biggest in the North Carolina plantation system, and at times held more than 1,000 enslaved people. Sellars emphasized there is still space to join the Black History Month hike, which starts at 10 a.m.
The Catawba Trail Farm allows community members to get involved in agriculture. Some of the vegetables available this weekend include arugula, radishes and kale. Sellars argued access to produce is important.
"Our goal is to make sure that we can make fresh vegetables accessible as we strive to increase food security," Sellars added.
Sellars stressed people of color should build on what was left to them to become better, healthier individuals who know how to take care of themselves.
"I was always taught to be ashamed of my ancestry because we were enslaved, but now I know better," Sellars observed. "I need to be ashamed of the enslaver but not of my ancestors, who were enslaved."
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It is Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month and Arizona lawmakers are considering a bill which would require schools to teach their histories to students.
Senate Bill 1301, which is being cosponsored by Sen. John Kavanagh, R-Fountain Hills, and Sen. Brian Fernandez, D-Yuma, said the state has no curriculum requirements to include the histories.
Astria Wong, executive director of the advocacy group Make Us Visible, said the initiative would help Arizona's student population see themselves in their lessons and argued it could even help lower bullying incidents. She noted her organization helped develop the curriculum.
"To cover topics like the World War II Gila River and Poston incarceration camps," Wong outlined. "We have quite a few very interesting things that people don't even realize -- one of the lessons is like Chinese chorizo -- which is one of the foods that we collaborate with Hispanics."
Wong said AANHPI groups have been fundamental in Arizona and believes more recognition is needed. As an example, Wong pointed out it was a Japanese immigrant who founded the Arizona Power Service company in 1886. She claimed without him, Arizona would not have electricity. The bill, which has received support from more than 30 community organizations, has been heard in the House and Senate.
Taninia Jackson, a biracial fourth-generation Japanese American, said for her, the legislation hits close to home. Her 94-year-old grandmother was incarcerated at Arizona's Gila River internment camp during World War II. Jackson said the legislation could be eye-opening for all Arizona students.
"We use words like 'melting pot,' but to know that it was a melting pot from the very beginning is different than the idea that certain people came in at certain times," Jackson emphasized. "It just changes somebody's understanding, and that is the gift of education, right?"
Jackson added Arizona has a chance to move in the right direction and join other states like Florida, Illinois, and New Jersey, which have all passed similar legislation.
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Five years after George Floyd's murder by a white police officer sparked nationwide protests and demands for police reform, progress remains slow.
Across the country, police were involved in more killings in 2024 than any year in more than a decade, including 17 in Oregon, and Black people continue to be killed disproportionately.
Sandy Chung, executive director of the ACLU of Oregon, said some police reform measures in the state, like banning tear gas and decriminalizing drug use, were passed after the protests and revoked soon after.
"There have been a lot of fights we've had to make sure that the powers of the police aren't expanded in ways that are really harmful to our democracy and civil liberties, civil rights," Chung explained.
A 2021 Oregon law established the Commission on Statewide Law Enforcement Standards of Conduct and Discipline, which Chung supports. However, she noted it lacks a protocol for addressing officers involved in white supremacist groups.
Chung criticized an Oregon bill just passed by the Senate to expand police drone surveillance with less court oversight. She argued more funding and power for law enforcement will not improve community safety. It is especially dangerous now, as she warned the Trump administration is weaponizing policing to target opponents and suppress free speech.
Chung argued Oregonians know addressing the root causes of crime is what makes communities safer.
"To make sure that people have access to good jobs, to health care, to schooling, to housing," Chung outlined.
Chung added many of the most successful police reforms are happening on a local, rather than a state level, and pointed to the Community Board for Police Accountability created by Portland voters in 2020. She noted the model, which has not yet been implemented, incorporates the best practices recommended for an oversight committee.
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New research finds Black working women still face rampant discrimination in the Golden State.
The California Black Women's Collective Empowerment Institute commissioned a survey of 452 Black women. Almost 60% reported experiencing workplace racism or gender discrimination in the past year.
Shakari Byerly, managing partner of EVITARUS Research, conducted the survey.
"Nearly half feel marginalized, excluded from or passed over for work opportunities," Byerly reported. "Only 16% strongly agree that opportunities for leadership and or advancement in their workplace are available to them."
Among respondents, 59% reported being somewhat satisfied in their job but 38% said they are unsatisfied, with company leadership and work culture to blame. They also cited microaggressions, wage disparities and lack of mentoring or access to leadership roles.
Byerly noted one-third of those surveyed said they do not feel supported by their supervisor at work.
"They were subjected to stereotypes, were talked down to, or subjected to disrespectful communication at work," Byerly explained. "And 38% say they were accused or thought of as an angry Black woman."
The report called on the state to enforce pay equity, expand antidiscrimination protections and ensure workplace accountability. They called on companies to invest in Black women's leadership development and eliminate bias in workplace culture.
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